Posted by David GerstmanWednesday, July 3, 2013 at 7:45am | 7/3/2013 - 7:45am

Not recognizing the Muslim Brotherhood’s nature

Two and a half years ago, the New York Times ran an editorial, Mr. Mubarak is put on notice, in which it hailed the opposition to Mubarak’s rule and scolded him for failing to heed the public’s will.

What if, inspired by the massive outpouring of popular opposition, the Tamarod, to the regime of President Mohammed Morsi of Egypt, the editors of the New York Times issued a similar call for the President hailing from the Muslim Brotherhood to take heed?

We might have gotten something like this spoof of a 2011 NY Times editorial:

Mr. Morsi is put on notice

We sympathize with the frustration and anger that is drawing tens of thousands of Egyptians into the streets of Cairo and other cities this week, the country’s largest demonstrations since those that helped force the previous president, Hosni Mubarak from power, nearly two and a half years ago. Citizens of one of the Arab world’s great nations, they struggle with poverty — hunger and poverty rates have risen over the past three years — rising food prices, unemployment and political repression.

Inspired by so-called Arab Spring, they are demanding a government that respects its citizens’ voices and is truly committed to improving their lives. A lesson of the Arab Spring should be a warning to all rulers who cling to power for too long and ignore their people’s demands. President Mohammed Morsi of Egypt clearly hasn’t figured that out.

As the impetus for a major demonstration on Sunday grew, Mr. Morsi gave an unconvincing speech in a lame attempt to ward off dissatisfaction. The June 30 demonstrations are still on demanding Mr. Morsi’s resignation. According to news reports, the protestors came from all social classes and ideologies.

As authoritarian governments often do, the one in Cairo is deluding itself about the causes for the unrest, which had left two protestors and one policeman dead. Officials blamed the previous regime. Even if remnants of the Mubarak regime are playing a role; the truth seems more complex — it is easy to understand why Egyptians are fed up.

This is a delicate moment for the United States and Egypt, an increasingly unreliable ally and partner in Arab-Israeli peace efforts.

Mr. Morsi may still have a chance to steer his country on a stable path without sacrificing it to extremist elements. That will require ordering security forces to exercise restraint against the protestors and — even more importantly — quickly offering Egyptians a credible, more democratic path forward.

Yesterday in Military Ultimatum in Egypt, the editors were noticeably less charitable to the current pro-democracy protesters and somewhat less hostile to President Morsi than they were to his long serving predecessor.

To be sure, the editorial criticizes Morsi, but does so in a “why did he do what he did?” mode rather than acknowledging that Morsi’s affiliation with the Muslim Brotherhood ensured that he would pursue an extreme path and seek to arrogate as much power to himself as possible.

What is most important to understand about the Brotherhood is that, despite its religion-based ideology, it should be viewed in political, not theological terms. It is and has always been a revolutionary organization seeking to seize state power and then to transform thoroughly the societies where it operates.

Morsi is no more legitimate than Mubarak because he ruled for less time or because he was once elected. He never accepted that there were limits on his power and sought to exploit as much authority as he could. This might have worked if eighty or ninety percent of Egypt supported the Brotherhood. But Morsi won only a little more than half the votes. That is why the dissatisfaction with him is so strong.

The current opposition is no less legitimate or worthy than the Tahrir Square protesters of 2011, simply because they don’t have a recognizable face like Wael Ghonim. Then those spearheading the drive to oust Mubarak had no more of a defined agenda than the current protesters. Those who did have a coherent plan was the Muslim Brotherhood, which was content to stay in the background and ride the wave of discontent to power.

The bottom line is that Egypt’s military isn’t the obstacle to Egyptian self-government, the Muslim Brotherhood government is. It is a point that the editors of the New York Times refuse to grasp.